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Barnsley sign QPR goalkeeper Cooper

Barnsley sign QPR goalkeeper Cooper

BBC News16 hours ago

Barnsley have signed QPR goalkeeper Murphy Cooper on a season-long loan deal.The 23-year-old extended his contract with the Championship club earlier on Monday and will now spend the forthcoming campaign with the Tykes.He spent last season on loan with Stevenage and kept 16 clean sheets in 37 League One appearances."Murphy is a really promising young goalkeeper and we're delighted to have him with us for the season ahead," boss Conor Hourihane told the club website., external

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Sam Kerr completely blindsides her fans by making a shock move as she battles to beat secret injury setback
Sam Kerr completely blindsides her fans by making a shock move as she battles to beat secret injury setback

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Sam Kerr completely blindsides her fans by making a shock move as she battles to beat secret injury setback

Matildas superstar Sam Kerr has shocked her fans by making a surprise return to training with the national side as they prepare for their first matches under new coach Joe Montemurro. The Chelsea star let fans in on her shock move with an Instagram post showing a photo of the Sam Kerr Football Centre in Perth, where the Tillies are training, and a shot of her feet as she was about to take the field, along with three grinning face with sweat emojis. Kerr was not named in the team's 33-player squad to take on in friendlies on Slovenia and Panama in friendlies to be held on June 26 and 29, and July 5 and 8. She also wasn't sighted as her teammates arrived down under to begin their preparation over the last few days. It's the first time Kerr has trained with the side since April, when she did some light work ahead of the friendlies against South Korea but did not see any playing time. She has just finished a holiday in Mallorca with fiancee Kristie Mewis and their baby son Jagger. The 31-year-old suffered a serious knee injury when she ruptured her ACL during a training camp with Chelsea in January last year. Her progress with the knee has been the subject of heavy speculation as it has taken longer than expected. In April, Chelsea manager Sonia Bompastor revealed Kerr would not return before the end of the Women's Super League season in England. Earlier this month, Montemurro revealed that the striker had been forced to undergo a second surgical 'intervention' on a fresh mystery injury that had been kept a secret from fans. It was reported that Kerr returned to Australia to undergo the procedure and she made a surprise appearance at the A-League Women's grand final in May, about a week after Mewis gave birth to their son. Montemurro stated he won't be making an official call on Kerr's future as Australia captain, until she returns to play. He explained that Kerr was back training on grass, having undergone the surgical procedure, while also revealing that her knee injury was much better. 'I think there were some complications and I've only caught up with the scenario in the last 24 hours,' he said. 'There was a subsequent intervention, but I do believe she is now back running. 'I think it was something completely different (to the existing knee injury). I think the knee is fine. 'I think there was some other issues, but again I've only been briefed in the last 24 hours.' Thursday night's match against Slovenia will be Montemurro's first match in charge of the side and the four friendlies are an important building block ahead of the 2026 Asian Cup in Australia, the 2027 World Cup in Brazil, and the 2028 Olympics. Montemurro has already held meetings with his players, and Clare Wheeler is liking the fluid and control-style game plan the former Arsenal, Lyon and Juventus coach is encouraging. 'As a midfielder, you want to get on the ball,' Wheeler said. 'So it's great when a coach says that he wants you on the ball. I think that's music to our ears. 'And it's also a challenge ... especially against, opposition where you're under pressure a lot. 'But I think when you have that trust from your coach that believes in the team to be able to do that, it feels good.

I think we'll go for the win – Josh Tongue insists England can chase down India
I think we'll go for the win – Josh Tongue insists England can chase down India

South Wales Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

I think we'll go for the win – Josh Tongue insists England can chase down India

Tongue took three wickets in four balls on a dramatic fourth evening at Headingley as India left their hosts a chase of 371 – and a glimmer of hope in a game they should have killed off after hundreds from KL Rahul and Rishabh Pant. England head into the final day needing 350 more with all 10 wickets intact, a tall order that would once have been considered mission impossible. Target acquired: 3️⃣7️⃣1️⃣ Missed Josh Tongue's three wickets in four balls? 🤯 Watch now with our catch-up highlights! 👇 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 23, 2025 But it was just three years ago, in the early days of Ben Stokes' captaincy, that they hunted down a record 378 at Edgbaston against the very same opponents. Better yet, they did it for the loss of only three wickets and roared home in the 77th over. With 90 at their disposal on Tuesday, there is no interest in batting out for a stalemate. There has been just one draw since Stokes took over as skipper, a rain-ruined clash with Australia in 2023. Asked if sharing the spoils in this series opener would be acceptable, Tongue said: 'No. I think we'll just go for the win. 'That's the clear message in the changing room. It's just being as positive as we can. They're going to bowl well at times, so it's just crucial we soak up that bit of pressure and reapply it again on their bowlers. 'I don't see why we can't chase that down. With our batting line-up I feel we can chase anything down.' Tongue also saw fit to raise memories of Stokes' finest hour as a Test cricketer, his 'miracle of Headingley' in 2019, where a magical century carried England to 359 by a solitary wicket. 'I remember Stokesy's innings here against the Aussies,' he added with a smile. The target may well have been taken far out of England's grasp had India not imploded from 333 for four to 364 all out in their second innings. Tongue was the main reason for their hasty conclusion, wrapping up a triple-wicket maiden with the scalps of Shardul Thakur, Mohammed Siraj and Jasprit Bumrah. He was decisive against the tail in India's first innings collapse too and is ready to lean into Ben Duckett's suggested nickname, 'the mop'. 'I've done it twice now, so I might have to start calling myself that,' he said. 'When the lower order is in it's a good opportunity to get some wickets.' Rahul, who played with great control for his 137, is ready for fireworks as both teams fight to the end of a thrilling contest. 'It's a blockbuster finish waiting tomorrow,' he said. 'There's definitely going to be a result. That's what England have said very openly and their style of cricket suggests that as well. That gives us a good opportunity to pick up 10 wickets.'

Lionesses star Lucy Bronze reveals England's tactic for dealing with the pressure of defending their European Championship crown
Lionesses star Lucy Bronze reveals England's tactic for dealing with the pressure of defending their European Championship crown

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Lionesses star Lucy Bronze reveals England's tactic for dealing with the pressure of defending their European Championship crown

Rebranding Sarina Wiegman 's Women's Euro 2025 squad as a 'new England' will help the roster manage the pressure of defending their title, claims Lucy Bronze. The right back, who spoke to Women's Health UK ahead of her seventh major tournament, is a Lionesses legend and is one of 13 players in Wiegman's 23-strong group that won the Euros in 2022. But the reigning champions' preparations for next month's tournament in Switzerland have been less than ideal. Mary Earps and Fran Kirby have both retired from international football, while Millie Bright also made herself unavailable for selection, saying she is unable to give '100 per cent mentally or physically'. It means that a different England will take to the field in their opener against France on July 5 and Bronze, who is coming off another trophy-laden season - this time with Chelsea - has opened up on the ways in which the new-look roster is dealing with the pressure of being defending champions. 'What we've spoken about [as a team] is that we admire what we've done in the past, being the Euros winners,' said the 33-year-old. 'But we're a 'new England' going into this and we'll create our own history. There are people going to the Euros and it'll be their first ever tournament wearing an England shirt. You want them to enjoy that. 'And I think taking away that pressure is a great way for them to do it…I'm always thinking about the Euros. I can't not think about it. Everything I do is to play in the Euros and win the Euros. 'Though people who know me know that I am a little bit obsessed.' England's most decorated player is keen to add to a trophy cabinet of gargantuan proportions. Five Champions League titles, four Women's Super League crowns and the 2022 European Championship are among her most prized team accolades, though that list neglects her domestic honours in France and Spain or the multitude of individual awards she has received during her professional career. Yet, the thing she has received most attention for - from the public, at least - was her brave decision to go public on her autism and ADHD diagnosis earlier this year. The 2019 Ballon d'Or runner-up sat down with former Lionesses star Alex Scott and discussed the impact the diagnoses have had on her life inside and out of the sport. 'Doing that interview is the biggest reaction I've ever had to anything I've ever done in my whole career,' she added. 'Even winning things football-wise or getting a degree or anything that I've done that I've had success with wouldn't come close to the reaction I had from that…In a [recent game] a little kid ran up to me and said, "You're my idol, because I'm autistic and I have ADHD and I'm so proud of you for speaking about it." 'I thought, "He's proud of me?! He's seven!" Because he's seen someone else [with neurodivergent traits], he thought it was really cool.' Bronze will be hoping to continue to inspire with her performances this summer. In spite of the noise surrounding the team, the Lionesses remain one of the best sides on the continent and retain several key players with winning experience. Success three years ago appeared to spark serious change for women's football in this country and Bronze is a firm believer that the sport has the power to change hearts and minds outside of it. She added: 'When we won the Euros, it was empowering to so many women who didn't even like football. Seeing women succeed in "a man's game" or "a man's world" gave [a feeling of] confidence and achievement. 'And for the men who loved football, but who maybe had a bit of underlying misogyny, they were like, "Do you know what, we love football and we're so proud of these girls." I think football can help change society.'

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